General
descriptionThis fictional rocket ship was created by Tom Paris for his holonovel series The
Adventures of Captain Proton.Gallery: Holograms

Known ships
No name given

AnnotationsThe exterior of the ship was
shown in VOY: "Bride of Chaotica!".

Class
specifications
None available

"Incredible Tales of Scientific
Wonder"

"Deep Space 9"

General
descriptionIn an illusory version of the 1950s Benjamin Sisko's alter ego Benny
Russell based his novel Deep Space Nine to be published in Incredible
Tales of Scientific Wonder on a drawing of this space station.

Known stations
DS/9

AnnotationsThe
station, quite visibly a retro version of Deep Space 9 in the style
of the 1950s, appeared in DS9: "Far Beyond the Stars". It is
the most bizarre item in this whole database -- it exists only as a fiction
in an illusory story in a fictional TV series. The station's lettering
"USAF" indicates that it is run by the USA. Several
spaceships are visible on the sketch too.

Class
specifications
None available

Various rockets and
spaceships, seen in the office of Douglas Pabst, the publisher of Incredible
Tales of Scientific Wonder in DS9: "Far Beyond the Stars"There were just too many sketches and magazine titles to be listed
separately. The red model rocket, on the other hand, looks remarkably similar to
one featured in the
Tintin comic
Destination
Moon.

Malosian

Ship

General
descriptionDiagrams of this ship design were shown on a display in a
simulator aboard Enterprise.

Known ships
No name given

AnnotationsThe
simulation served to trick Degra, the designer of the Xindi
superweapon, into revealing its location in ENT:
"Stratagem". The monitors inside the simulator apparently
showed status diagrams of the very shuttle the two were supposed to be
in. Archer said that the shuttle was of Malosian origin. Most likely
the Malosians really exist, but Archer may have chosen a race that
Degra was not too familiar with, for any slight mistake in Malosian
signage and language may have have blown the whistle on the ruse.

General
descriptionThis version of USS Voyager existed in records of the Kyrians for
700 years until the 31st century. "The warship Voyager - one of the most powerful vessels of its time. Armed with photonic torpedoes and particle weapons, this ship of destruction could wipe out an entire civilization within hours."

Known ships
USS Voyager

AnnotationsUpon the arrival of the real USS
Voyager at the Kyrian homeworld a war with the Vaskans broke out that
almost wiped out the Kyrian culture. Centuries later the Kyrians
obviously followed a revisionist interpretation of history in which
they put the blame for the war on the crew of Voyager. In the Museum
of Kyrian Heritage historians created an alleged reconstruction of
history in which Voyager was a heavily armed warship manned by a
ruthless crew. A backup copy of the EMH could eventually rectify the role of
his crew (VOY: "Living Witness").

Class
specifications
Warship

Nexus Reality

Toy fighter

General
descriptionIn Picard's Nexus vision, his son Matthew is playing with a model of a
fighter spacecraft or aircraft.

Known aircrafts
No name given

AnnotationsMatthew's
Christmas gift is actually a Space Marines EVAC Fighter from the
"Aliens" action figure line by Kenner (1992). It features
firing "Alienator missiles" and a transparent "Alien
capture pod" at its aft end. Nothing has been done to disguise
the toy's true origin or to make it look like a Trek vessel, so we may
safely decide that it is just as unreal in the real Trek universe as
it is in the late 20th century.

Class
specifications
None

Talaxian

Toy ship

General
descriptionIt is unlikely that this model was built after an authentic
(Talaxian) ship. If it was, the prototype is not recognizable owing to
the coarse finish of the toy.

Known ships
No name given

AnnotationsBrax,
the Talaxian boy, holds a toy ship in his hands in VOY:
"Homestead". It may represent an existing Talaxian vessel,
maybe even one of the disassembled ships that brought the colonists to
the asteroid. But it looks overall rather crude, not like an authentic
replica, unlike the Malon model ship.
The toy was put together using a metallic turned part, possibly a
drill or similar tool casing, various fan grills and a transformer
coil.

Class
specifications
None available

Unknown Class

USS Lollipop,
mentioned by Will Riker in TNG: "Arsenal of Freedom"Riker made up this vessel when he noticed that he was talking to a phony
Starfleet captain. We know that it's "a good ship", as Riker
said. This is a tip of the hat to an old song about "The Good Ship
Lollipop" performed by Shirley Temple in "Bright Eyes" (1934).

USS
Titan, shown as a previous command (since
stardate 47203) in Will Riker's fake future in TNG-R: "Future Imperfect"Riker will really take command of a USS Titan around stardate 56844.9
("Star Trek: Nemesis"). Stardate 47203 would be almost ten years
sooner, and corresponds to the early 7th season of the real timeline. It is
questionable whether the Titan mentioned in "Future Imperfect" is the
same ship and whether the alien who created the fake future included the Titan
because of precognition.

USS Vortex,
fictional ship in the Doctor's version of Photons be Free, interior seen
in VOY: "Author, Author"On the USS Vortex the poor EMH is suppressed by his humanoid crewmates. "Capt. Jenkins"
murders a crewman just because she wants "Lt. Marseille", the EMH's
inveterate enemy, to receive preferred treatment. We know little about the ship
itself, but we may assume that it looks not unlike USS Voyager and that it
belongs, let's say to the Intrigue class.

USS Voyeur,
fictional ship in Tom Paris' version of Photons be Free, interior seen in
VOY: "Author, Author"The USS Voyeur is an overall more pleasant place than
the USS Vortex, only that it suffers from the arrogance of its EMH. We know
little about the ship itself, but we may assume that it looks not unlike USS
Voyager and that it belongs, let's say to the Intimate class.